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Bailey continues to run

Newport Harbor alumnus never gave up even after he became an amputee last year. He’ll try a 5K on Sunday.

June 12, 2009|By Steve Virgen

On Sunday, when morning comes, Andy Bailey will wake up with a special anxiety.

When he takes his place to start at the Orange County Track Club Pancake Breakfast 5K at Fairview Park it will almost be like the first time. And, Bailey, a Newport Harbor High alumnus, will be grateful, oh so thankful.

Most days, the 70-year-old is just happy to be alive. To be running for the first time with the help of prosthetic? Makes sense why he’s so excited.

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Sunday’s 5K benefits the Estancia High cross country and track and field teams. Bailey, an OCTC member, will play a part in that as well. Two scholarships in his name will be given to a male runner and a female runner from the Estancia program.

A scholarship in Bailey’s name? That makes sense, too.

He’s become an inspiration for many, persevering after a freak accident a little more than two years ago.

“I’m just happy I didn’t get a brain injury,” he said. “I’m just thankful to be alive. With the prosthetic, I’m up and about.

“I’m so thankful to be able to enjoy life again.”

Bailey remembers the date all too well. It was his day when he came so close to death.

December 12, 2006.

It was a late Monday afternoon and Bailey decided to wash the car, because it needed it after a trip to Arizona.

He saw a van parked to deliver laundry up the way from his home in Laguna Beach and didn’t think much of it.

But minutes later, he saw a runaway van coming his way, the driver yelling and screaming, waving his arms frantically while running just behind it.

The van hit Bailey’s car and the car crashed into his right hip, he said.

“My left hip went against a wall,” he said. “And then I was floating. I somewhat landed on my back. I raised my right leg and it was just dangling there, hanging by a little bit of flesh.”

Doctors seemed positive after surgery — placing a titanium rod near the tibia to hold the leg and fusing the ankle from parts of his other muscles — but the wound became infected.

He was in the hospital for seven weeks before the wound became dirty. He had to go back again because of a horrible staph infection.

For two years, he battled infections and depression, not to mention the medical bills. His wife, Jeri, supported him and did her best to help with the infections as well.

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